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Chauncey N. Pond Papers

 Collection
Identifier: RG 30-042

Scope and Contents

The collection is arranged into five records series: I. Correspondence of Foreign Missionaries, Collected and Received by C. N. Pond; II. Historical Files Collected by C. N. Pond; III. Files Relating to the Pastoral Work of C. N. Pond; IV. Pond Family Photographs; and, V. Harriet Perkins Pond Albums. Within series, materials are arranged alphabetically by topic or type of material.

Chauncey Pond's collection of missionary correspondence and historical material, with its emphasis on China, documents the Ponds' personal interest in the Oberlin missionaries who served in Shansi Province. The Ponds' only daughter, Jennie Pond Atwater (1865-96), for four years a missionary at the Fenzhou station of the American Board, died there of puerperal fever at age 31. In the 1900 Boxer Uprising, the Ponds lost their son-in-law, the Rev. Ernest R. Atwater (1865-1900), their grandchildren, Ernestine (b. 1889), Mary (b. 1892), Celia, and Bertha (b. 1896), and Ernest's second wife, Elizabeth Graham Atwater. The Pond papers contain Jennie Pond Atwater's letters (1892-96) addressed to her mother and father describing daily life, her children, and her struggle to learn Chinese. Jennie's letters to other China missionaries are located in the papers of missionaries Lydia Lord Davis (30/80) and Alice Moon Williams (30/58) held in the College Archives. A copy of Ernest's diary letter describing Jennie's death is located in the papers of Alice Moon Williams (30/58) with other letters from Ernest.

Unique to this missionary collection is a small group of letters written in 1898 by Jennie Pond Atwater's daughters, Ernestine (age 8) and Mary (age 6), to their parents and grandparents, Rev. and Mrs. Pond. These letters are fresh and affecting, especially in view of the imminent tragedy. Also present in Series I are letters from the following China missionaries: Dr. Irenaeus J. Atwood (1850-1913), Rowena Bird (1865-1900), Eva Jane Price (1855-1900), the Rev. C. W. Price (1847-1900), Alice Moon Williams (1860-1952), Lydia Lord Davis (1867-1952), and Jennie Rowland Clapp (1845-1900).

The Boxer Rebellion itself is not well documented in Pond's historical files. The researcher is advised to consult the papers of Alice Moon Williams (30/58) for contemporary accounts. Of interest in these papers, however, are photocopies of news accounts (1900-01) from The Oberlin News describing the memorial service for the missionaries who were killed, conducted by the Rev. Pond and Rev. Henry. M. Tenney (1841-1932) for Oberlin's First and Second Congregational churches on November 18, 1900. These accounts reveal the devastating impact on Oberlin's Congregational churches, each of which had lost missionaries in the uprising. First Church's long involvement with foreign missionaries is documented by a notebook (1865-85) containing loose papers relating to the Ladies Foreign Missionary Society, probably a predecessor to First Church's Woman's Foreign Missionary Society. Among the papers are two letters (1874, undated) from women missionaries to the wife of the President of Oberlin College, Mrs. Charles Grandison Finney (Rebecca Allen Rayl, 1824-1907).

A scrapbook assembled by the Rev. Pond, entitled "News from China," depicts in part the role of several graduates of Oberlin College in reopening the Shansi Mission after its destruction by the Boxers. Spanning the period 1904 to 1919, it contains printed materials relating to the work of Wynn Cowan Fairfield(1886-1961), Paul L. Corbin (1875-1936), and Flora Heebner (1874-1947) and contains a report (1914) on the Lydia Lord Davis School for Girls in Fenzhou. Also present are photographs (1908, 1912-19, n.d.) depicting the mission buildings at Fenzhou and Taigu and the families of the second generation of Shansi missionaries. These are housed in Subseries 2 of this series. Photographs of the Pond family and relatives are housed in Series IV and V.

The collection contains letters (1875-1913, undated) from missionaries in Africa, Bulgaria, Turkey, India, and the Pacific island of Uola. Correspondents not only depict daily life in their countries but also provide corroboration of the common missionary experience: loneliness, fear, illness, language difficulties, and unshakable Christian faith. Correspondents from Africa include Emma C. Redick (b. 1872), Janette E. Miller, Nellie J. Arnott, Louise B. Fay (b. 1869), and Minnie J. Sanders. Charles K. Tracy (b. 1874) and Anna Victoria Mumford (b. 1838) write from Turkey and Jennie Fuller from India. Some letters are addressed to "Mr. and Mrs. Pond" and others are circular letters to "Dear Friends."

Materials pertaining to Rev. Pond's pastoral work span the years 1866 (the year of his ordination) to 1920, the year of his death. Pond's appointment and reappointments to the pastorate at Berea Congregational Church in Berea, Ohio, are documented by a small number of appointment letters (1862-94). Pond's correspondence (1894-1906) with the trustees of the North Bloomfield Congregational Church mainly concerns the terms of his service there as a part-time supply preacher. Various miscellaneous files, including an account book, scrapbook materials, and loose notes, provide scant evidence of Pond's tireless work for the Industrial Missionary Association of Alabama and the Associated Charities of Lorain County.

Dates

  • Creation: 1852 - 1920
  • Other: Date acquired: 10/30/1969

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted.

Biographical Sketch

Chauncey Northrop Pond, son of Henry Nelson (1819-1847) and Mary Jerusha Castle Pond (1821-1906), was born in Hamilton Corners, Medina County, Ohio, on October 23, 1841. He had two siblings - Chester Henry (1844-1912) and Celia E (1846-1847). In 1858, Pond moved to Oberlin and enrolled in the Preparatory Department of Oberlin College, receiving the A.B. in 1864 and the A.M. from the Oberlin Theological Seminary in 1868. Findlay College awarded him the Doctor of Divinity in 1901. On August 24, 1864, Chauncey Pond married Harriet Permelia Perkins (1837-1926), a student in the Literary Course at Oberlin College from 1859 to 1864. They had three children: Jennie Evelyn Pond (1865-1896; A.B. Oberlin 1888), Henry Tennyson Pond (1867-70), and Percy Martyn Pond (1870-1945; A.B. Oberlin 1892).

Following his ordination in October 1866, Pond held pastorates in several Congregational churches in Ohio. He served four years as pastor of his home church in Medina (1866-70). After three years as Financial Secretary for the financially-troubled Oberlin Theological Seminary, Pond held pastorates in Berea (1873-75) and Wauseon (1876-77), Ohio. From 1877 to 1880, he edited the periodical The Plantation Missionary for David C. Cook publications in Chicago. On his return to Ohio, he began a long period of service with the American Sunday School Union, holding the posts of Corresponding Secretary and regional Superintendent. He resumed preaching part-time in 1894 at North Bloomfield Congregational Church in North Bloomfield, Ohio. In 1906, after twelve years of service, he left the position.

In addition to his preaching duties, Pond was actively engaged in charity and mission work. He served as President of the Ohio Conference of Charities and Corrections (1904-05) and as Northern Secretary of the Industrial Missionary Association of Alabama (1895-1907), an organization established to assist blacks in acquiring land. For more than fifty years, Rev. Pond attended meetings of the State Conference of the Ohio Home Missionary Society. In these various capacities, he traveled, lectured, and contributed numerous articles to newspapers and religious periodicals. Chauncey N. Pond died in Oberlin at the age of 79 on June 12, 1920.

Note written by Valerie S. Komor.

Extent

1.80 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The papers of the Rev. Chauncey Northrop Pond reveal Pond's concern to document the lives of missionaries in China and other countries by collecting missionary correspondence and related historical materials. Pond's professional files offer a limited view of his sixty-year career as a Congregational minister. There is virtually no information on his personal life in this collection.

Method of Acquisition

The papers of the Rev. Chauncey N. Pond were transferred to the Oberlin College Archives in five separate accessions in 1969, 1970, 1971, 1974, and 1992. The Harriet Perkins Pond autograph album, photograph album, and a list of Oberlin missionaries through 1888 was received from the Oberlin College Library, Special Collections, in 2001.

Accruals and Additions

Accessions: 84, 101, 130, 241, 1992/80, 2001/94.

Related Materials

Files related to Pond’s service as Secretary of the Class of 1864 are located in RG0 College General, Class Files.

The following collections in the Oberlin College Archives contain materials relating to missionary work in China:

15            Records of the Oberlin Shansi Memorial Association

21            Oberlin File, Section II

30/21         George Frederick Wright

30/26         Margaret Portia Mickey

30/49         Paul Leaton Corbin

30/58         Alice Moon Williams

30/67         George Nelson Allen

30/76         Willard L. Beard

30/80         Lydia Lord Davis

30/130        Everett D. Hawkins

30/145        A. Clair Siddall, M.D.

38/1          Miscellaneous Missionary Records

For additional information on missionary work in Africa, consult the papers of Alice and Elizabeth Little (30/7) and the papers of Gertrude Jacob (30/85). Jacob's papers also contain letters from missionaries in India. The papers of Henry E. Woodcock (30/81) contain letters of Lucy Woodcock, a teaching missionary in Jamaica. Further information relating to mission work in the Oberlin community is available in the Records of the First and Second Congregational Churches (31/6/12).

Title
Chauncey N. Pond Papers Finding Guide
Author
William E. Bigglestone, Valerie Komor, Melissa Gottwald, Anne Cuyler Salsich
Date
03/06/1992
Description rules
Rules for Archival Description
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository

Contact:
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)